Some evidence and hope that secular publishers may provide creation information

Recently I have found reason to think and hope that secular publishers
(even academic ones) may be starting to provide some information about
creation. Specifically, in April 2007, a catalog arrived from the Academic
department of a major publisher, Random House, that included some apparent
examples of a case for design.1 Along with the standard
evolutionary texts from Stephen Jay Gould, Darwin, etc., were a few
titles such as Creation, Remarkable Evidence of God’s Design by
Grant R. Jeffrey2; The Probability of God, A Simple Calculation
That Proves the Ultimate Truth by Stephen D. Unwin3; and God:
The Evidence by Patrick Glynn.4 Although only one of these
authors was somewhat familiar to me (Jeffrey), I hoped such books might provide
at least a slight but noticeable break in the “iron curtain” of modern
evolutionary thinking within most secular and academic publishing. As it
turns out, such offerings may give reason for hope, but with need for further,
more internally consistent books or DVDs, such as those recommended at the
end of this article.

I hoped such books might provide
at least a slight but noticeable break in the “iron curtain” of modern
evolutionary thinking within most secular and academic publishing.

At first, I looked at how the above authors approached evidence for the Creator,
starting with Jeffrey. In his book’s acknowledgments, Jeffrey states that “research and
documentation of ... recent scientific discoveries ... prove that our universe was
intelligently designed and fine-tuned to allow humanity to flourish ... [and] prove that the
Bible’s account of Creation is scientifically credible.” He makes a good general case for
design (such as the constants of physics that are so amazingly fine-tuned that they allow
complex life to exist). His doctorate is in Biblical literature and in talking about the
contradiction of many Christians also being evolutionists, warns (pg. 12-14) that “a
double-minded man is unstable in all his ways” (James 1:8). He makes a connection
between the weakness on origins of North American Christians who “have a
fundamentally compromised view of the authority and truthfulness of the Word of God”
with the fact that their “personal behavior does not significantly differ from the secular
non-Christian world that surrounds” them.

However, not all of Jeffrey’s arguments for the Creator are appropriate. For example, he
tends to quote unbiblical timeframes of billions of years and the “Big Bang” without
question (e.g. on pg. 87). Furthermore in 1999, Steve Austin and Mark Strauss5 of the
Institute for Creation Research wrote that Jeffrey’s end-times claim that “since ... 1900,
the growth in [the number of] major earthquakes has been relentless” was incorrect; in
fact, Austin and Strauss indicated that the number of earthquakes around the world have
probably been declining through recent decades. In other words, Jeffrey’s apologetic from
science and logic, although somewhat widely known, has not always been accurate.
However, overall he presents many good and thought-provoking evidences for creation,
such as the lack of evolutionary transitional fossils, and demonstrates a more scripturally
consistent perspective than the other two books.

In The Probability of God, author Unwin3 states that he has a new probability
calculation that shows God’s existence is likely. However, he appears to have problems
with a scientifically supported creation, or with a creation that would be biblically consistent.
For example, although he makes a case that the origin of “the recognition of
goodness” without God is unlikely, he claims that scientific information cannot be used to
provide evidence for or against the proposition that God exists (pg. 35). In other words,
he argues that we can’t make a scientific case for (or against) the Creator. He also
assumes that the universe was produced by undirected cosmic evolution, but has to admit
that an accidental universe is extremely unlikely: “[If] the values of ... fundamental
constants [had] been different by just a few percentage points ... [galaxies] would not
have condensed from the primordial soup [of the universe and] ... stars, planets, and
ultimately human life would not have appeared” (pg. 23). In an interview in 2005, he also
made it clear he is an evolutionist, thinks intelligent design is “naïve,” and believes ID
should not be taught in science classes (in a CBC Radio interview).6 Although
Unwin may show philosophically that it is more likely than not that God exists, he does
not appear to support a creation process, nor even intelligent design concepts.

Glynn, the author of God: The Evidence,4 is a person who was an atheist for years, then
became a believer. He writes “the anthropic principle [the concept that the universe looks
like it was designed to allow human life and human observers] ... offer[s] as strong an
indication as reason and science alone could be expected to provide that God exists” (pg.
55). He also offers evidence that prayer has been shown to help people medically and
psychologically. However, he too has problems with theology, for example when he
writes (pg. 34), “In the early nineteenth century, many scientists ... computed the age of the earth from the biblical genealogies (modern ‘Creationists’ or ‘young-earth’ theorists
try to do this today; however, unlike their predecessors, they do not have the excuse of
scientific ignorance to justify such absurdities).” By writing this, he shows he does not
have a very open, informed or scripturally-consistent worldview. If you would like to see
an alternate and scientific case for a created earth that is just thousands of years old,
consistent with the biblical genealogies, see The New Answers Book,7Unraveling the Origins Controversy,8 or other similar valuable
publications.

In conclusion, it is hopeful that there are now at least some relatively open-minded and
even some design-supporting books available through the standard secular/academic
publishing world. However, such availability should be supplemented by additional,
logically consistent and even theologically consistent materials (such as the books and
DVD listed below).7,8,9 Because of a degree of societal openness and the growing interest
and thinking about intelligent design, it is hoped that more such materials will be offered
in secular and academic publishers’ catalogs. If so, they probably will receive significant
public interest and support. In fact, let’s consider encouraging this trend by obtaining at
least some of these kinds of materials from secular publishers when they are fair and
courageous enough to sell them.

Dr. J. Douglas Oliver is a Professor of Biology and Assistant Director of the Center for Creation Studies at Liberty University. He has an M.S. in zoology from the University of
Toronto and a Ph.D. in ecology from the University of Georgia.